NASA will follow the solar eclipse of two August aircraft

When complete parts of the United States collapsed, NASA is in the dark of August 21, to get a longer view of most, thanks to the WB-57 Flap nozzle.

Most modern aircraft take telescopes will see clearly see all the outdoor atmospheres of the sun when the crown is known to NASA. You can also take the thermal image of Mercury for the first time gather at different temperatures on the surface of the planet to learn.

“That could be the best observation of high-frequency appearances in the crown,” said Dan Seaton, co-researcher at the Colorado Boulder Research Project and Researcher, the statement said. “Extending the observation period and coming allow for high altitude, we can see some very events or the next waves will outline the observations being essentially invisible in just two minutes.”

Experiencing a nuisance in 7 minutes, these planes – for most viewers in the field, the eclipse will last two and a half years

30 high-definition images capture every other crown, the statement said. This is one of the 11 projects funded by NASA during the US collapse, instead, according to a NASA statement.

An Airplane from Ellington Field in Houston flying through Missouri, Illinois and Tennessee, to NASA. They will fly at an altitude of 50,000 feet, where the skies are 20 to 30 times darker than on the floor and have less turbulence to shake the telescope while photographs are taken in high quality.

“When the moon is blocking the sun during a complete darkness, regions in the world that are in direct paths of total darkness overnight for nearly three minutes,” said Steve Clarke, director of Heliophysics Department NASA in Washington, said in politics. “This is one of the best eclipses we have observed to date, and we plan to use this unique opportunity to learn everything we can about the sun and its impact on the earth.”